It said this week it had bought the company in the belief it was investing in a country "that encouraged foreign investment".

This is not a struggle against the ills of alcohol but an attempt to redesign the society according to their [AK party] beliefs and lifestyleMusa Cam, Opposition MP

'Drink yoghurt'

In other points of the new law

Restaurants and bars will be unaffected

Alcohol sales will be prohibited within 100 metres (yards) of mosques and schools

Images of alcoholic drinks will have to be blurred on television - something that is already done for cigarettes

There will be stricter penalties for drink-driving, with drunken drivers with a blood alcohol level above 0.1% facing up to two years' imprisonment

All liquor bottles will have to display warning signs about the harm of alcohol

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who does not drink or smoke, said recently that ayran, a non-alcoholic yoghurt drink, was the "national drink" of the Turks.

AKP politician Lutfu Elva, head of the planning and budget commission, defended the law, saying similar restrictions were in place in Scandinavian countries.

But Musa Cam, an MP from the main opposition party, the CHP, said: "No one can be forced to drink or not to drink. This is a religious and ideological imposition."

Quoted in an article in Turkish newspaper Hurriyet, he said: "This is not a struggle against the ills of alcohol but an attempt to redesign the society according to their [AK party] beliefs and lifestyle."

Hasip Kaplan, a Kurdish MP, warned the law would hurt tourism, which "can't recover easily once collapsed", the state-run Anatolia news agency reports.

Correction 28 May, 2013: We have made clear that the ban only applies to sales from shops, not bars and restaurants.